Welcome, 77 artists, 40 different points of Attica welcomes you by singing Erotokritos an epic romance written at 1713 by Vitsentzos Kornaros

Wednesday, January 24, 2018

At a joint press conference with his Greek counterpart Alexis Tsipras following their meeting in Davos, Switzerland, Macedonian Prime Minister Zoran Zaev said that his government will rename the country's main airport and the highway towards GREECE, both currently called Alexander the Great, with ...

A journalist from a country that has problematic relations with its neighbors, with potential military encounters, becomes familiar with military terminology. Turkish and Greek journalists are, for instance, very familiar with terms like “dog fight.” Aerial battles between fighter aircraft, conducted at close range, ...

Almost a decade after it faced a humiliating national bankruptcy and required the biggest financial bailout of any country in history, GREECE has just been told that, at long last, its unprecedented and hugely painful economic crisis may be reaching its end. European Union finance ministers agreed earlier ...

Turkey yesterday handed over a new batch of evidence to GREECE that showed the direct involvement of former officers in the July 15, 2016 coup attempt by the Gülenist Terror Group (FETÖ). Eight officers had fled with a military helicopter to GREECE on July 16, 2016. Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras ...

Macedonia has extended an olive branch toward Greece by agreeing to rename its main airport and a major highway in another step toward ending a decades-old dispute over the former Yugoslav republic’s name. Prime Minister Zoran Zaev said after meeting his ...

According to Mr Draghi GREEK banks still have a very high stock of NPEs. He also added that it is of crucial importance for the economic recovery in Greece and the forward-looking capital adequacy of GREEK banks that swift progress be made on NPE resolution, in line with the targets that banks have ...

F amous GREEK composer Eleni Karaindrou has completed the score for 'Bomb, A Love Story', directed by Iranian actor, director and screen writer Peyman Ma'adi. So far not much is known about the story of his film, but one synopsis reads: as the bombardment of Iranian cities by Iraqi forces started ...

Zaev said his administration is set to change the names of an airport and a highway leading to Greece. They are currently called 'Alexander the Great', a name Greece says is an attempt to steal from GREEK history. The highway will be renamed “Friendship”, he said. The debate about Macedonia's name ...

Police attend a Greek property auction in October 2016 (file photo) An “effective auction system is an important part of the work” in cutting bad loans in Greece, the head of the European Central Bank has insisted. Mario Draghi, replying to a letter ...

Macedonia to Rename Airport to Help Resolve Name Row With GREECE, PM Says. Jan. 24, 2018, at 2:39 p.m.. Macedonia to Rename ... GREECE insists the country be referred to internationally as the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia until the row is resolved. That is the name under which it was ...

Emirates announces new offers for the Greek market, with special rates for passengers traveling from New York, Dubai, Hong Kong, Beijing, Johannesburg and many other destinations. For flights from January 26, 2018 to June 26, 2018, passengers traveling from GREECE will have the opportunity to ...

GREECE ranked 28th in the world among countries that are considered to be the best for 2018 on the basis of a series of criteria such as their perception abroad, their overall qualities, impressions that contribute to the development of trade, investment, tourism and their impact on international economy.

Alltours again forecasts the strongest growth this year for GREECE, which already generated 30% increases in turnover and customer numbers last summer and became the company's second-largest destination. Next summer, the first 2 hotels of Alltours hotel chain, Allsun, are expected to open in Crete.

Euphoria Retreat opens in the historic Mystras location of Laconia, peloponnese in May 2018 as the first holistic luxury wellnessbeing destination spa in GREECE. Euphoria Retreat is listed among the most anticipated spa openings in Europe with an investment of 20 million euros, and high standard ...

JOURNALIST: We will now be talking to the Minister of Foreign Affairs, Nikos Kotzias.Good evening, Mr. Minister.N. KOTZIAS: Good evening, Mr. Hatzinikolaou, and good evening to everyone watching us.JOURNALIST: I’ll start our conversation with the Skopje issue, which is currently the hot topic, asking whether – in case of the two countries failing once again, after 24 or 25 years, to reach an agreement –Skopje will join NATO anyway, under its provisional name according to the Interim Accord, in other words, under the name fYROM? Or, in such a case, will Greece again exercise its veto, as the Karamanlis government did in Bucharest? I’m getting right to the heart of the matter, as you see.N. KOTZIAS: Mr. Hatzinikolaou, our northern neighbours, Skopje, the leadership of this friendly country, are aware that they cannot join international organizations such as those you mentioned, without a solution on the name issue.JOURNALIST: Mr. Minister, does your response mean that, in such a case, we will repeat what we did in Bucharest? In other words, will we again veto Skopje’s bid for membership in NATO?N. KOTZIAS: Skopje will not be admitted to NATO if it doesn’t reach an agreement on the name issue.JOURNALIST: That is a clear statement. I won’t pursue that any further, as I respect the fact that the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and the government are responsible for handling the matter, and they have to reveal their stance in the right way and at the right time.Right now in fYROM, in Skopje, there is talk of holding a referendum on the issue. In other words, they’re saying that the political forces made a commitment, in the election campaign, that any agreement reached with Greece would be put to a popular vote.Do you think they will go through with this, and do you think an agreement reached between Athens and Skopje would survive a referendum in our neighbouring country? And how do you respond to those who suggest we do the same thing in Greece – hold a referendum on the issue?N. KOTZIAS: This commitment is mentioned in the platform statements of the two Slavomacedonian parties. It isn’t in the platform positions of the Albanian parties. Mr. Osmani, who we are pleased to be expecting tomorrow – the Deputy Prime Minister of the government, hailing from the largest Albanian party – has stated that it isn’t very clever for one to use the referendum, but I can’t express an opinion, because that is a domestic policy issue. If an agreement is reached and then rejected in a referendum, I think the cost for fYROM itself will be higher than anyone can imagine today.Regarding a referendum in Greece, there is no reason – there is a responsible government, there is a majority in the Hellenic Parliament, and the agreement will come before Parliament, as provided for. I remind those who are currently talking about a referendum that the Interim Accord of 1995, which provided the compound name that includes the term “Macedonia”, that is, the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia – and I think it was a mistake to put “former Yugoslav” before “Republic”, qualifying the form of government instead of putting another word before the term “Macedonia” – that this word was accepted by the majority of people without referendums and without even going through Parliament.JOURNALIST: Mr. Minister, I heard you mention a parliamentary majority. So I want to ask whether, first of all, the governing majority – and I’ll move on to the opposition later – is unified in its stance on the name issue. And I ask because, at some point, your partner in the government and Minister of Defence, Panos Kammenos, expressed a stance on the non-use of the term “Macedonia” or a derivative of “Macedonia” in the name that will result from the negotiations.N. KOTZIAS: I think a mistake is being made, and the wrong question will get the wrong answer. The real question, and not the one being asked by New Democracy, is: Do we want to resolve this problem? Do we want our country to stop being a prisoner of history – because, as I often say, history must not be a prison, but a school – and be the leading factor that provides stability and security to the whole region, reopening social and economic relations with the region to the greatest possible extent and giving the region the potential for greater membership in international organizations? That is the question. Everything else is petty politicking. We are a government that – providing the other side acts rationally – will dare to resolve the problem of the name, which is a waste of energy in Greece and in the Balkans as a whole. We dare to resolve the issue, and we have no problem taking on historical responsibilities. The problem is, the current main opposition party created the problem – it was already here, we didn’t create it – and proved incapable of resolving it when it was in office. So I’m not interested in its big or small talk. Besides, it is also proving to be incapable, as the opposition, of having a unified outlook and thinking, and we aren't asking it for suggestions on how to solve the problem or anything else. It should just let the country and its responsible government resolve the issue.JOURNALIST: But now I ask you to please respond to my question. As you saw, I let you set out your stance.JOURNALIST: Mr. Minister, I could interrupt you and remind you that my question was ...N. KOTZIAS: Your question is wrong. It is New Democracy’s question. What I’m saying is that the question the country is facing is whether we will resolve the name issue, and not New Democracy’s problems.JOURNALIST: Mr. Minister may I ask my question, call it what you will? So my question is – and what New Democracy or any other party says doesn’t concern me – my personal question for Nikos Kotzias, the Minister of Foreign Affairs, is whether he knows what the governing partner’s position is in the end.Because I heard him say, “no to the use of the name, of the derivative of the name ‘Macedonia’”, and then, as he was coming out of the Prime Minister’s office, I heard him say that he puts his trust in you. So I want to hear whether you will come to an agreement.N. KOTZIAS: First of all, I express the policy of the Greek government, and differing opinions have the right to exist in every government. And it is the government’s obligation to find a solution internally and to secure a majority in Parliament in order to implement its policy. It isn’t obliged to say what ‘a’ or ‘b’ will do.I just want to note that Mr. Kammenos didn’t say that he disagrees with the use of the term “Macedonia”. He said he doesn't agree with the use of the term “Macedonia” in Greek. This is very important, and we will have to see how this plays out in the negotiations themselves.Again, what the country should be discussing – rather than Mr. Kammenos, because it seems that New Democracy wants to impute to him a leading role in the Popular Right – is whether this issue needs to be resolved. My answer is yes, it needs to be resolved. Is it good for the country? It is. They left it unresolved for 25 years, Mr. Hatzinikolaou, and those who today are wagging their finger at us and telling us what to do were in government.We have no hesitation about resolving the problem to the benefit of our people and the region.JOURNALIST: If you had heard my comments on the radio this morning, you would know that I essentially agree with the stance that it is a problem that must be resolved and that there is an opportunity to resolve it now.N. KOTZIAS: What the government needs to do is ensure its rational and just resolution.JOURNALIST: But I want to remind you – you know this better than I – for the sake of the discussion, that we are talking about a geographical qualifier before the word “Macedonia”. And I want to ask whether this is the case or whether we are looking at other qualifiers. For example, earlier I heard you call the political parties in fYROM “Slavomacedonian”, and I remembered, because I, too, am an “ancient Greek” and experienced the issue first hand back in the 1990s, I remembered that the late Konstantinos Mitsotakis talked about the name “Slavomacedonia”. I also hear that the name “Nova Makedonija” is on the table. So, a simple and clear question: Are we discussing only a geographical qualifier, or others kinds qualifiers as well?N. KOTZIAS: The government has stated that it is discussing a compound name for all uses. The name “Slavomacedonia” referred to the Slavs, who are one of the components of the state we today call “fYROM”. The Albanians are directly opposed to any name like “Slavomacedonia”, because they believe it excludes them as a component of this state. There are also a number of proposals that were put forward by either the Foreign Minister of Portugal at the time, in 1992, or by Vance and Owen, who proposed “Nova Makedonija” – some proposing it as two words and others as one. All these proposals have been set down and we will put forward our choices – and, as the Ministerial Council, we have settled on our choices – in the talks we will have with the officials from our neighbouring country. I don’t think we should go into a discussion right now of one name or another. I repeat, a compound name for all uses.JOURNALIST: Mr. Minister, I will now ask a question regarding what New Democracy has been saying: Some people in New Democracy are saying that the Skopje issue could bring down the government. In other words, they are saying that if Panos Kammenos and ANEL do not adopt the proposal you settle on, the “declared confidence of the Parliament” to the government will be lost. I'd like your comment on that.N. KOTZIAS: First of all, the Hellenic Constitution says nothing like that. As you know, a “declared confidence of the Parliament” is determined in various ways, and not by whether someone agrees on one specific issue or another. Second, you can be sure there will be a parliamentary majority to approve a good and creative agreement we will bring to the Parliament, and I hope the other side reacts as well. And third, I want to say that New Democracy’s opposition begins and ends with one demand: For the government to step down and bow to New Democracy’s suggestion that the Syriza government is a brief historical interlude. They expected us to last only two months, and we are coming up on three years since our first electoral victory. In my opinion, this shows a deficiency – and I’m sorry to say this – a deficiency within the opposition, which, unable to come together and find a position on the Skopje issue, is trying to raise the issue of elections again. In other words, we have a debate over economic policies and they want elections. We have a debate over what the social state will be like, and they say, “you are transitory, you’ll soon be out of government.” We have a debate about national issues, they say, “you will step down.” I just want to say one simple thing: These forces of the main opposition party created the problem. They were incapable of solving it. Today they don’t want to discuss the substance of the issue, just the formalities/procedural issues, and as a result they won’t do as a future government of this country, because they won’t solve any problems.JOURNALIST: Mr. Minister, some people are saying and writing – I read a number of such articles, and I have to say I was concerned when I read them – that the process of finding a solution on the Skopje issue might make room for a new party to appear to the right of New Democracy. A nationalist party – let me put it that way – a “northern league” on the old Italian model.I want to ask what you think of these recent scenarios.N. KOTZIAS: From the analyses we have carried out to date, we don’t see such a party being created. But I do see that this fear expresses an internal conflict in New Democracy between the forces that, in their way, wanted at times to contribute to the resolution of this problem – and I welcome those forces – and the forces whose positions are closer to those of the extreme right and fear that, if the Skopje issue is opened up, there may be an internal conflict that acts as an avalanche and creates rifts within New Democracy. That is why I understand and characterized as I did the questions as to whether Kammenos agrees or disagrees – because these are really questions aimed more at rallying forces within New Democracy and suppressing the question. Let me say, personally, that I really do understand this conflict.JOURNALIST: Mr. Minister, you are a frank person. It is clear that certain parties are gambling politically on the Skopje issue.N. KOTZIAS: They lack leadership.JOURNALIST: Mr. Kammenos, for example, is clearly gambling politically on the Skopje issue, as Mr. Leventis has also been doing in recent days.N. KOTZIAS: We were talking about New Democracy, and I don’t think Mr. Kammenos or Mr. Leventis are in New Democracy.JOURNALIST: As you mentioned him.N. KOTZIAS: I say again that New Democracy has an internal problem. I sympathise, but I shouldn’t be responding to questions that derive from their internal problem. With regard to the political parties manoeuvring around this issue, I want to make two observations, if I may. One is that it is perfectly logical for there to be different views on the Skopje issue. It is an issue that has troubled the country. It is an issue of great importance. It is an issue of identity, of historical heritage. In other words, every viewpoint that argues for a different name isn’t necessarily extreme rightist. But this viewpoint makes the following error: It regards us as attending the Baptism today – the child was just born and we are going to baptise it. Unfortunately, the “child” is twenty-five years old, it has already been baptised. It is now a young...JOURNALIST: It has been recognized as “Macedonia” by 130 countries.N. KOTZIAS: That’s exactly right. It is now a young lady and wants to look at whether it will take her own name and her husband’s name as well; in other words, a compound name. The compound name was already given in 1995, not by us as the government, not by me personally, but by Greece: the “former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia”. This was the compromise we made. As a result, every day I receive – this is interesting – 100 to 200 emails and SMSs that say, “Niko, Mr. Kotzias, my dear man or my not-so-dear man, don’t give the name “Macedonia”. If it were 1992, one could really discuss this. In the year 2018, with the realities as they are, we aren’t baptising something that hasn’t yet been named. We have a country with a very specific name – a name with very specific international recognition – and we want to give it a compound name that clearly distinguishes it from Greek Macedonia.JOURNALIST: You put it very clearly. Thank you very much, Mr. Minister.N. KOTZIAS: Thank you, Mr. Hatzinikolaou. If we were in ancient Athens, you would certainly be a great teacher of rhetoric.JOURNALIST: Your humour is always excellent. Thank you.N. KOTZIAS: I believe it – that’s why I say it.JOURNALIST: Thank you very much, Mr. Minister.

Athens demands that the country change its name to remove any implied territorial claim on the Greek region of Macedonia and end any suggestion of a link between the mostly Slavic state and the legacy of Alexander the Great, a king of ancient Macedon.

Late last semester, nine of the 10 positions on GREEK Council's executive board were filled after elections were held. The communications chair remains vacant due to a rule limiting any one organization from having more than two representatives on the board; the organization is still in the process of ...

… getaway. Not only does the Greek island boast lusciously hot temperatures … Harding World Imagery) One of Crete's biggest beaches, Falassarna … on the south coast of Crete, Frangokastello makes for a brilliant …

GREECE'S Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras has said he is hoping to lift a veto on the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia's membership of NATO and integration with the European Union, by resolving a longstanding name dispute between the two Balkan neighbors. Tsipras held talks with FYROM Prime ...

Davos, Switzerland: Macedonian Prime Minister Zoran Zaev said Wednesday that his country would rename Skopje's Alexander the Great airport to show its "strong commitment" to ending a long-running row with GREECE over the use of the name Macedonia. The move aims "to show practically that we ...

Davos, Switzerland: Macedonian Prime Minister Zoran Zaev said Wednesday that his country would rename Skopje's Alexander the Great airport to show its "strong commitment" to ending a long-running row with GREECE over the use of the name Macedonia. The move aims "to show practically that we ...

Excavations next to the uninhabited Greek islet of Keros, already identified as the enigmatic hub of a forgotten religion, have now revealed traces of intense industrial activity more than 4,500 years ago. Digs last summer showed that Dhaskalio, a rocky ...

Speaking at a panel discussion in Davos, Switzerland, Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras described Turkey as an “aggressive neighbor.” Addressing the migration crisis, he blamed “austerity policies” for “the rise of racism and nationalism in Europe.” His European partners couldn’t always appreciate the challenges of living with an ‘aggressive’ neighbor such as Turkey, the Greek … The post Tsipras in Davos: “Turkey is an aggressive neighbor” blames “austerity policies” for rise of racism and nationalism in Europe appeared first on Keep Talking Greece.

Bond yields in the eurozone crept higher on Wednesday, as investors struck a cautious tone the day before today's European Central Bank meeting. The ECB gathering looks likely to be a more lively event than anticipated just a few weeks ago given that the central bank has flagged “early” 2018 for a ...

DAVOS, Switzerland (AP) — The Latest on the World Economic Forum in Davos (all times local): 7:10 p.m. Greece's prime minister says he's hoping to lift a veto on Macedonia's membership of NATO and integration with the European Union, by resolving a ...

Dubai-based budget carrier flydubai is set to launch flights to Thessaloniki in GREECE and Aqaba, Jordan from June 2018. ... Thessaloniki is the second-largest city in GREECE with over one million inhabitants and a major transportation hub for the country and southeastern Europe, notably through the Port ...

Farmers from Trikala, central GREECE, on Wednesday parked their tractors at the Megalohori junction on the E65 highway, stepping up their protests at the government's ongoing austerity drive. In comments to the Athens-Macedonian News Agency, the head of the union representing farmers from Trikala, ...

Though largely unknown, the Hellas Filmbox Festival in Berlin is certainly worth attending for those interested in Greek film. Among this year's guests are directors Yannis Sakaridis and Volker Schlöndorff.

The sound of fighting could be heard from above ground — the dull echoes of boxing gloves as they make contact with skin, the thunder clap of shins as they struck Thai pads, and the cries of intensity as bodies collided during sparring sessions.

The Greek government is wrong to pursue a solution to the name dispute with the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia (FYROM) now, New Democracy (ND) leader Kyriakos Mitsotakis said on Wednesday. Speaking at ND’s political committee, Mitsotakis stressed ...

The debate about the future name of the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia (FYROM) and its political implications has left the even-more-critical issue of the neighboring country’s constitution irredentist claims in the shadows. While Greek ...

… Eurokinissi/Lydia Siori) ATHENS – Greek pharmacists who have long enjoyed … Union citizens who aren’t Greek although it wasn’t said … allowed to operate in Greece. Until recently, Greek pharmacies closed in the …

… Eurokinissi/Lydia Siori) ATHENS – Greek pharmacists who have long enjoyed … Union citizens who aren’t Greek although it wasn’t said … allowed to operate in Greece. Until recently, Greek pharmacies closed in the …

… in Greece exceeded EUR 100 million. Targeted EIB Group support for Greek … at 14 locations across Greece, including on 12 Greek islands. A new … and private sector clients iacross Greece. Projects currently being considered include …

GREEK Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras and Italian Premier Paolo Gentiloni told business leaders in Davos on Wednesday (24 January) that migration cannot be solved by countries alone – it needs a concerted action, but also public-private investments. “It is necessary to face this problem not as a ...

Keros has been long famous for its flat-faced Cycladic marble statues. Latest excavations on the island reveal that the ancient inhabitants had an advanced system of plumbing long before the Mycenaeans built it in the palace of Knossos. Around 4,500 years ago, ancient engineers and workers terraced the little island of Keros in the Cyclades … The post Pyramid island Keros in the Aegean reveals its stunning prehistoric secrets appeared first on Keep Talking Greece.

The president of the European Central Bank, Mario Draghi, has called for full geographical coverage of foreclosures across Greece. In a letter to European Parliament Member Nikos Chountis, Draghi said that while Greek authorities have made “welcome” progress in recent weeks to speed up foreclosures and help banks reduce their huge pile of nonperforming loans, … The post ECB Draghi calls for “full geographical coverage of foreclosures across Greece” appeared first on Keep Talking Greece.

NICOSIA – Adding to the building tension surrounding Greece’s negotiations with the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia (FYROM), Cypriot President Nicos Anastasiades said giving away […] The post Anastasiades Says FYROM Can Call itself Macedonia – or Northern Greece appeared first on The National Herald.

Greece’s four major banks, among the worst hit by a mountain of bad loans, are vulnerable despite scores of billions of euros in recapitalization schemes […] The post Fitch’s Says Bad Loan-Buried Greek Banks Still in Deep Trouble appeared first on The National Herald.

Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras, who had said he was “proud” of refugee and detention centers on Greek islands despite videos showing they were overcrowded, […] The post Blaming EU, Tsipras Says Greece Handling Refugee Crisis With “Dignity” appeared first on The National Herald.

ATHENS – New Democracy deputy Giorgos Koumoutsakos, responsible for foreign affairs, accused the government on Wednesday of “leaving Greek parties in the dark” about its […] The post ND: Gov’t Leaving Greek Parties “in the Dark” about FYROM Negotiations appeared first on The National Herald.

The end of January marks the feast of the Three Hierarchs – which also represents the traditional celebration of Greek Letters –however, if recent years […] The post Regenerating Organizational Culture: Lessons from History appeared first on The National Herald.

NEW YORK – The parish council of the Three Hierarchs Church in Brooklyn unanimously decided to honor Greek-American businessman and philanthropist Michael Psaros with the […] The post Michael Psaros to be Honored with Hellenic Heritage Award appeared first on The National Herald.

Multi-million-dollar Greek yacht charter Incrediblue has been snapped up by Spain-based Nautal, one of the largest boat-leasing companies in Europe. Antonis Fiorakis, CEO of Incrediblue, told Capital.gr this was Nautal’s first acquisition, explaining ...

Rolling coverage from the second day of the World Economic Forum, plus other key events across the markets and the global economy * Latest: Angela Merkel on dangers of protectionism * German chancellor: Don’t descent into stereotypes * Jack Ma: I’m scared a trade war could break out * Ross: US troops are joining the trade war * The agenda 4.04pm GMT Meeting with the Prime Minister of FYROM, Zoran Zaev, on the sidelines of the World Economic Forum. pic.twitter.com/nk8hUighqq 3.45pm GMT TODAY IS BEING BILLED AS A “MOMENT OF TRUTH” BY GREEK GOVERNMENT OFFICIALS AS PRIME MINISTER ALEXIS TSIPRAS MEETS HIS MACEDONIAN COUNTERPART IN DAVOS. A solution to the seemingly unsolvable dispute between Greece and the former Yugoslav republic of Macedonia could be solved in Davos. Continue reading...

PITTSBURGH (AP) — The University of Pittsburgh has suspended a fraternity and temporarily barred all GREEK life organizations from hosting events with alcohol after a student was hospitalized in an "alcohol-related incident." University officials have not released specifics about what led to the student's ...

GREECE will only have to head north for its first campaign in the UEFA Nations League, the new tournament of national teams that offers an alternative path to the Euro 2020 finals. The Greek team was drawn on Wednesday to face Hungary, Finland and Estonia in a round-robin group of games to take ...

The leaders of Italy and GREECE lashed out at Central and Eastern European countries on Wednesday over their lack of solidarity on the migration crisis, warning they may suffer for it in upcoming European Union budget negotiations. The negotiations "will be a very difficult task for us, especially the ...

Sofia. The meeting between GREECE and Macedonia over the so-called “name dispute” will conclude without success, historian Prof. Bozhidar Dimitrov commented for FOCUS Radio. He forecast that the majority of Greek people will reject any name of the Macedonian state that contains a geographical ...